Greenleaf Music to release "Into the Zone" by Ryan Keberle & Catharsis

Trombonist Ryan Keberle & Catharsis
Release Second Record, Into the Zone

Exploring Meditative Concept of Mindfulness As Applied to Improvised Music,

On Dave Douglas' Greenleaf Music,
 Out Sept. 30, 2014

Album Features Original Catharsis Lineup:

KEBERLE (trombone/melodica), MIKE RODRIGUEZ (trumpet),
JORGE ROEDER (bass), ERIC DOOB (drums),

Plus Newest Addition to Catharsis, CAMILA MEZA (vocals);

And An Encore Guest Spot from SCOTT ROBINSON (sax)

Read More in Keberle's Liner Notes

Most jazz musicians avoid repetition dogmatically. But when Ryan Keberlerealized he’d been playing the same eight-note phrase in all his recent warm-ups, the trombonist embraced his inclination. “As I started playing it more and more, I realized I wasn’t thinking of anything else,” he says. “You can reach a real state of mindfulness through repetition.” Keberle built the phrase into “Without a Thought,” the complex but gracefully flowing centerpiece of his new album, Into the Zone. It’s his first for Dave Douglas’ Greenleaf Music—and arguably the most personal document yet from a trombonist and bandleader better known for his soloist role in famed large ensembles.

Keberle is featured trombonist in Maria Schneider’s Grammy-winning orchestra, Darcy James Argue’s experimental Secret Society band andPedro Giraudo’s Latin jazz ensemble. Keberle has toured with Sufjan Stevens, and recorded with pop stars like Alicia KeysDavid Byrne andSt. Vincent. Even at home in New York City his plate stays full: He teaches atHunter College, leads two groups and occasionally subs with the Saturday Night Live band.

On Into the Zone (which features the smoky vocals of Chilean singer, Camila Meza) Keberle uses mindfulness and Zen philosophy as techniques to tune out the noise of that busy career, while accessing something elemental. “The active process of thinking and editing and critiquing is what most often gets in the way of truly great, spontaneous music,” Keberle says. “It’s those moments of spontaneity that are typically most telling of an artist’s true self.”

Keberle wrote the album’s starkly glamorous music with his stripped-down, pianoless quartet, Catharsis, in mind. Internally, Keberle tends to hear his compositions for orchestra, but he loves the clean power of channeling them through just a few instruments. “A large ensemble allows you more control in telling your musical story,” Keberle admits. “But trying to do more with less has actually opened up manifold possibilities. And as a composer-bandleader, it means trying to let go and let the musicians in your band tell the story.” And in a pared-down setting, a side of his playing emerges that’s often easy to miss: his sensitivity, his discipline, the straight-to-the-point evocativeness of his solos.            

Much credit is also due to the strong, flexible chemistry of Catharsis, which features Mike Rodriguez on trumpet, Jorge Roeder on bass and Eric Doob on drums. Saxophone great Scott Robinson joins as a guest on two tracks, slotting snugly into Keberle’s arrangements and taking a gripping solo on “Gallop.” Most notable, though, is the fertile divide between Meza’s wordless vocals and the band’s double-brass frontline: It feels blurry, sometimes even invisible—partly because Keberle’s trombone sound has such a fluid, vocal-like quality.

“I equate the human voice with honesty,” he explains, saying he strives to achieve an equally primal effect with the trombone. “It isn’t always going to sing the right note at the right time to the right chords, but that’s part of the excitement, and the value. Regardless of the style or the complexity, when audiences hear a voice they immediately pay more attention to the music”

On the disc-ending, two-movement “Zone,” Keberle starts in dappled harmony with Rodriguez, underneath Meza’s wind-tracing melody. A quarter of the way through, he picks up the melodica. All of a sudden Keberle is playing minor chords with upward angles, building tension and creating a sharp sort of darkness. By the end, he and Meza are laying down an oscillating foundation of harmony while Rodriguez takes a sky-scraping solo that makes the high register feel both irresistible and forbidding.

As a music professor in New York City, Keberle often finds that dedication to refinement can inhibit an artist’s ability to really self-investigate. “In the academic world there’s a lot of music these days that lacks that cathartic element. As the level of proficiency continues to rise, we’re losing some of the human aspect,” he says. “In terms of practicing and learning jazz and acquiring the knowledge you need to be a functional jazz musician, you also have to practice shutting down, and letting your mind go.” With Into the Zone, he has achieved something that’s thoroughly modern, but at the same time raw and ancient.

RELEASE DATE: SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

Marc Chénard's review of Riverside in Point of Departure

By Marc Chénard

At the risk of making an oversimplification, all creative minds fall into two categories: craftsmen, who forge some sort of personal identity out of existing styles; and visionaries, who create entirely new lexicons. The latter risk being marginalized as a result, or becoming pariahs, cast off and dismissed. They might earn deserved recognition if they live long enough, but it is often granted to them posthumously, supporting the observation of an American journalist: “All societies praise living conformists and dead trouble makers.”

In his lifetime, Jimmy Giuffre may not have been a trouble maker, or a rabble rouser, as say Albert Ayler was or Ornette Coleman had been, but he wasn’t exactly a living conformist. Giuffre in effect dared to be different from those who were different. In the early ‘60s, when jazz was coasting on tried and true hard bop recipes, and struggling with the nascent free jazz movement, Giuffre simply did not belong to either camp: Though he was from Texas and played tenor saxophone, he did not have the growl or the punch of a “Texas tenor.” Instead, the music of his late ‘50s trios with Jim Hall had a country flavor that was removed from hard bop and hip funky jazz grooves.

Read the rest at Point of Departure.

Dave Douglas quoted in New York Times piece on Jimmy Giuffre

Booed in the ’60s, but Time Will Tell: Jimmy Giuffre’s Music Finds New Appreciation

By Nate Chinen

A rigorous composer, clarinetist and tenor saxophonist, Jimmy Giuffre made a conscientious break from the jazz mainstream in the 1960s; by today’s standards, his music sounds quite modern.

It’s anyone’s guess what Jimmy Giuffre was thinking when he improvised the stark, intriguing solo clarinet pieces intended for his 1962 Columbia album, “Free Fall.” Along with the five that made the cut, there were five others that saw the light of day some 35 years later, as bonus tracks on an overdue reissue. Small gems of oblique investigation, they bear titles that seem to hint at Giuffre’s state of mind; among them is one with a lonesome air, played in shadowy subtones, that he called “Time Will Tell.”

That would have made a decent mantra for Mr. Giuffre (pronounced JOO-free), who died in 2008, of complications of Parkinson’s disease. A rigorous composer, clarinetist and tenor saxophonist, he’d had a few tastes of critical and commercial success before “Free Fall,” which also features the bassist Steve Swallow and the pianist Paul Bley, and belongs to the small category of jazz recordings that truly were ahead of their time. Its dismal reception cost Giuffre his recording contract and his momentum: He didn’t make another album for a decade, missing the peak years of the ’60s avant-garde.

“The Jimmy Giuffre 3 & 4: New York Concerts” (Elemental), due out on Tuesday, is a startling dispatch from that season in exile. Comprising a pair of previously uncirculated live recordings from 1965, it illuminates a murky period in Giuffre’s career. Atypically for him, both sessions feature a drummer, the superbly alert Joe Chambers, who brings a firm rhythmic push without muddying the music’s intent. “They sound great together, just so natural and flowing,” said the trumpeter and composer Dave Douglas. “If they had made a Blue Note record, it would be considered one of the big classics of the period.”

The urge is almost irresistible, when discussing Giuffre, to dwell on what might have been. But the new release also encourages some thoughts of what might yet be. It happens to arrive at a moment of growing admiration for Giuffre among current jazz musicians drawn to his chamberlike counterpoint and thoughtfully abstracted form.

Read the whole article here.

Eclectic Duos Offer Surprises at New York’s Town Hall

By Bill Milkowski

“Nobody knows what’s gonna happen—not you, not me, not even the musicians,” promoter Adam Schatz told the Town Hall audience on May 14 at the second edition of “A Night of Improvised Round Robin Duets,” a program of intriguing, unlikely duo performances that merged electronic experimentation with jazz improvisation.

The event, which was part of the Undead Music Festival and co-presented by Red Bull Music Academy, featured an all-star cast of musicians, including guitarists Marc Ribot and Nels Cline; pianists Marco Benevento and Allen Toussaint; trumpeters Dave Douglas and Wadada Leo Smith; and saxophonists Dave Murray and James Carter, among others. The result was a continuous flow of music that lasted two hours and highlighted some compelling pairings along the way.

Read the rest in DownBeat.

Riverside is a DownBeat Editor's Pick for May!

By Davis Inman

Is the jazz world primed for a Jimmy Giuffre revival? The clarinetist-saxophonist-composer—who died in 2008 at age 86—is the focus of two new albums: a tribute disc by Dave Douglas’ Riverside quartet and a two-disc archival set of previously unreleased Giuffre recordings from 1965 titled New York Concerts, out June 10 on Elemental Music. 

Read the rest here.

O imprevisível Dave Douglas lança agora o quarteto Riverside

By Luiz Orlando Carneiro

Os mais luminosos e influentes trompetistas do jazz destas duas últimas décadas foram – e continuam sendo – Wynton Marsalis e Dave Douglas, recém-chegados à casa dos 50 anos. O primeiro é o guardião do “fogo sagrado” da mainstream na evolução – e não na revolução - do modo de expressão musical nascido, como ele, em Nova Orleans. O segundo não rejeita o legado dos fundadores do jazz moderno, mas sua música se encaixa, perfeitamente, naquela definição do saudoso Whitney Balliett do jazz como o “som da surpresa”.

Dave Douglas é um “escultor” da massa sonora dotrompete, com aquela arte que consagrou o eminente octogenário Kenny Wheeler, cujo arquivo musical foi adquirido pela Academy of Music de Londres, e aberto ao público, no ano passado, numa exposição intitulada “Kenny Wheeler: Master of melancholy and chaos”.

O primeiro grande álbum de Douglas foi A thousand evenings (RCA, 2000), marco do jazz “composicional”, livre dos grilhões da tonalidade convencional, e de temática tão variada que vai de uma versão muito original de Goldfinger a uma suíte inspirada na música klezmer judaico-balcânica. Seguiram-se a este CD registros sempre surpreendentes do trompetista-compositor, à frente de grupos tão diversos como o elétrico sexteto Keystone; o metálico quinteto com trombone, trompa e tuba de Spirit moves (Greenleaf, 2009); o combo com Jon Irabagon (sax) e Linda Oh (baixo) que gravou o lírico Be still e o harmonicamente denso Time travel (Greenleaf, ambos de 2012). Sem falar no quinteto Sound Prints, com o não menos magistral saxofonista Joe Lovano, que paulistas e cariocas puderam ouvir ao vivo, no BMW Jazz Festival do ano passado.

Novo grupo do trompetista inspira-se no interplay do Jimmy Giuffre 3 dos anos 50/60

Pois bem. O irrequieto Dave Douglas está lançando (sempre no seu selo Greenleaf) o quarteto Riverside, em parceria com os irmãos canadenses Chet (saxofone, clarinete) e Jim (bateria) Doxas, mais o baixista Steve Swallow.

Read the rest here (in Portuguese).

London Jazz News on Dave Douglas & Uri Caine in Leeds, UK

Photo by Kim Macari

Photo by Kim Macari

By Kim Macari

The full house who turned out for trumpeter Dave Douglas and pianist Uri Caine at Howard Assembly Room, their only UK appearance, waited in quiet anticipation to hear how these two internationally renowned improvisers would approach a duo gig. It's an interesting format to hear jazz musicians perform in. Exposed, risky and with has the potential go in any number of directions, it felt like the perfect setting to hear creative musicians. 

The pair opened the concert with a medley of 300 year old North American folk tunes. Gentle and hymn-like, Uri Caine's lightness of touch and the warm, airy sound produced by Dave Douglas conveyed a sense of reverence - a feeling that returned many times throughout the evening. This was followed by an original of Douglas's, Ham Fist. Proving that they could switch directions with ease, Douglas introduced the angular melody before being joined by Caine. 

Read the rest here.